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Synopsis The House of Bernarda Alba follows the plight of the widow Bernarda. After her husband's death, she locks the doors and windows against the world and imposes a strict period of mourning on her five daughters. Under the shadow of the church and the rules of society, the women conflict and spiral into emotional chaos. Running time 2 hrs 40 mins approx. Sadly Cherry Morris was taken ill on April 28 2005 and remained in hospital until her death from cancer on July 21st 2005.
Dates: Opens 15 March 2005. Mar 5,7,8,9,10,11,12,14,16,17,23,24,26,28,29,30,31, Apr 6,7,8,9,15,16,18,19,20,27,28,29,30, May 2,23,24,25,26, Jun 1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9,16,17,18,20, Jul 14,15,16,26,27,28,29,30 at 19:30. Mar 15 19:00. Apr 9,16,20,28,30, May 25, Jun 2,4,7,9,18, Jul 16,28,30 Ma
It’s tempting to mistakenly date Federico Garcia Lorca’s The House of Bernarda Alba around the time of Chekhov’s similarly themed 1901 masterpiece, Three Sisters. In fact, its history is a more recent one – written in 1936 but not performed until 1945, and owing to copyright problems with foreign translations, not seen professional in London until 1973.
Two months after completing House, Lorca was murdered by supporters of Franco “for being a queer”. As with his death, the sexual and political also lay equally strong claims to his last play. While not overtly homosexual, the cruel denial of women’s natural desires provides parallels with the “love that dare not speak its name”. At the same time, the iron rod rule of the household makes a meaty metaphor for the oncoming fascist dictatorship of General Franco.
Both forms of repression and oppression are drawn out in Howard Davies’ fine production of David Hare’s fluid new translation. It’s ironic that it’s left to three men – Davies, Hare and, of course, Lorca himself – to convey the confined world of women, but they do so with assurance. And perhaps it’s not so ironic given that so much of this world is defined by the unseen influence of men – their voices often heard in the distance, singing as they work in the field, baying for blood as they hound a fallen woman from the village.
But it’s a strong cast of women alone that we actually see on stage. Penelope Wilton - only occasionally, but tellingly, allowing her character’s mask to slip - plays the widow of the title who, after the death of her second husband, clamps down harder on her five spinster daughters. It’s her duty, she believes, to protect the family’s honour and marginally wealthy status from unworthy suitors or other forms of disgrace.
Though her self-interestedly faithful servant Ponzia (a superbly controlled Deborah Findlay) tries to warn her, Bernarda’s plans to “beat them into submission” are thwarted by her daughters’ and the object of their collective passions, one Pepe el Romano. To the misfortune of all, he engages the eldest, Angustias (an appropriately ungainly Sandy McDade), for her inheritance; beds the youngest, Adela (spirited Sally Hawkins, resisting any attempts to “put out the fire between my legs”), for her beauty; and inspires bitter jealousy in the ugliest, Martirio (watchful Jo McInnes).
If there’s a problem with the production, it’s that Vicki Mortimer’s Spanish villa set, with its open courtyard, feels rather too airy for the claustrophobic nature of Lorca’s piece. But when the dramatic, and meteorological, heat is turned up in the third act, the walls and the world still seem to close in on these wailing women. Riveting.
I FEEL DISSAPOINTED AND CHEATED BY THIS BIZARRE PRODUCTION.WHERE WAS THE FEAR? WHERE WAS THE POETRY? INSTEAD I WAS PRESENTED WITH INAPPROPRIATE LANGUAGE,OVERACTED MELODRAMA AND CHEAP LAUGHS.IS THIS AN EXAMPLE OF THE DUMBING DOWN OF THEATRE DESIGNED TO ENTERTAIN AN AUDIENCE INCAPABLE OF APPRECIATING LORCA'S SUBTLETY? - 195.195.85.23)
09 Jun 05
Thoroughly enjoyed this magnificent production, not least because it made me rethink the play: the set is a cavernous atrium suggesting faded grandeur (not the usual claustrophobic courtyard), Bernarda's daughters dress for once with an eye to the historical period the piece is set in, and Penelope Wilton invests the matriarch with an unusual humanity, albeit one muted and stifled by her lot in life. All the acting is tremendous, especially Jo McInnes and Sally Hawkins as the two main daughters and Deborah Findlay's delightfully mouthy servant, and the lighting design must be one of the most beautiful I've ever seen. All in all, I came out thrilled, drained...and with a genuine new take on Lorca's great tragedy. - 195.82.123.181)
31 May 05
Very very disappointing - though I can't say I was surprised, getting David Hare to adapt Lorca is like throwing ice cold water over a fire... people in the 1930s saying 'whatever'? I don't think so. As for Wilton as Bernarda - she simply wasn't strong enough these girls are meant to be terrified of her.. Playing Lorca for laughs is just cheap too - this is a shame a totally missed opportunity they should have spent more time trying to capture the oppressiveness of the catholic small town world and less trying to make the audience titter. It was like watching a car crash and whats worse was I couldn't leave - I felt compelled to stay. - 82.69.37.108)
29 Apr 05
Not enough happens in this Lorca 'classic' to keep your attention for 130 minutes (plus untervals). You can't fault the staging, the design or the performances - they're all up to the usual RNT standard - but it's an interesting story padded out beyond its capacity to hold your attention. Worth a visit for the production, though. - 81.135.218.1)
10 Apr 05
I am sick of people hiding behind the old story 'must all productions stick to the text'. I like extreme theatre, Forced Entertainment are geniuses. I LOVE extreme adaptations. BUT, I like them when they remain true to the SPIRIT of the original text. I don't care if they had spoken 'Bernarda Alba' in Esperanto as long as there is a strong and intellectual reason for having done so that emerges from the play. However, this requires an effort that this production does not make. It HAS NOT remained true to the spirit of the play. It has misread the play to its own ends, turning it into CHEAP MELODRAMA. That, my friends, is not Lorca. - 195.92.67.68)
04 Apr 05
I thought that the production was absolutely excellent and completely in line with the play's quicksilver shifts in tone - if you think the laughs in this production are grafted on, please go back to the original text. They are there. What is the point of one more clunky, unsayable translation and sets which stick rigidly to the stage directions? Must Hamlet be set on the ramparts of a Danish castle? The entire cast was superb - Wilton's Bernarda was fiercely authoritarian, propelled by duty and yet (and this was the revelation for me) wonderfully three-dimensional. Davies' direction is masterly. A must see! - 213.122.12.181)
04 Apr 05
Lorca's play shone through some wrongheaded adaptation and direction. The language was too modern - eg Whatever! as a stand alone sentence. And the colonnade across the front of the stage made the action at the back too remote - and harder to hear. The set was very pretty, but in consequence failed to convey claustrophobia and menace. - 195.93.21.1)
01 Apr 05
I went with the WOS outing and had one of my best evenings in the theatre. I normally do not rate David Hare (loathe his banal language and trite situations) but here his dialogue shone (thanks to Lorca). I was interested (from the talkback after the show) that as opposed to a previously admired production, the emphasis was on the family and its situation. This approach certainly succeeded for me. I was on the edge of my seat and fully rewarded by the marvellously portrayed dramatic conclusion. - 193.118.206.221)
01 Apr 05
Howard Davies' production sheds new light on what can easily become a mono-toned operatic melodrama. By treating the text in an almost Chekovian manner, there is much more shading and subtlety; the humour and humanity is greater by not playing the tragedy of the end right from the beginning. This pays dividends, especially in the play's unexpected climax, and the approach is complimented by a largely strong cast. Penelope Wilton in particular makes for a thrilling Bernada, brutishly headmistress-like, yet deeply complex. Jo McInnes' Martirio is also noteworthy for her repressed desire. Davies' decision to separate the acts with an interval allows us to view the gradual shifts in dynamic which lead us towards the horrific denoument, while Paule Constable's lighting, piercing through the Moorish blinds, complements this passing of time beautifully. A breath of fresh air on a classic, which allows both naturalism, poetry and metaphor to co-exist. Unmissable. - 81.153.123.61)
30 Mar 05
I found this play inconsistent. If Bernada Alba is such a tyrant and prison-guard to her daughters, why is their language sometimes very flippant to her and why (at one point) do all the daughters save none climb over the window bars when the mother is there? The humour often failed and the final seen, whilst well acted, was almost an anti-climax. Having said that, the sense of fear and decay in the family is palpable and play did move me. - 193.114.91.245)
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